{"id":1216,"date":"2010-02-23T18:41:38","date_gmt":"2010-02-23T18:41:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/?p=646"},"modified":"2010-02-23T18:41:38","modified_gmt":"2010-02-23T18:41:38","slug":"the-difference-makers-marilyn-zehr-feb-21-2010","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/?p=1216","title":{"rendered":"The Difference Makers &#8211; Marilyn Zehr &#8211; Feb. 21, 2010"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<h3 align=\"justify\"><strong><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Based on Luke 4:1-13\u00a0 and Psalm 91<\/font><\/strong><\/h3>\n<div align=\"justify\">\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\"><br \/>I don\u2019t know about the rest of you, but I enjoy watching the Olympics.\u00a0 And whether you enjoy watching the games or not, it\u2019s hard not be caught up in the intensity of the struggle of these athletes to persevere, to be their best, to take risks, and to express both the joy and the anguish of it all as they succeed in varying degrees to reach their goal.\u00a0 These two weeks we get a small glimpse into a very tiny part of the lives of the athletes.\u00a0 And if you watch enough of the coverage you get to see the back stories of a small handful of them when the producers show us documentary clips called \u201cThe Difference Makers\u201d\u00a0 -depictions of the people and events that surround the athlete and make a contribution to their lives and training.\u00a0 Somehow early in their lives they discovered that part of their identity included some significant athletic skill, (a fundamental self understanding of who they are and what they might be capable of) and what follows is the where, what, how and why they continued on their journey to athletic excellence.\u00a0 And as I\u2019ve watched some of these I can\u2019t recall a single back story that does not include significant challenge or adversity.\u00a0 From discovery of their identity, through adversity, we are privileged to get a glimpse of their journey towards a goal that may or may not culminate in success at the Olympics.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Today\u2019s scripture text \u2013 Luke 4:1-13, is a significant part of the back story of the life of Jesus and among other things it is a story of adversity.\u00a0\u00a0 Jesus is led into the Wilderness by the Holy Spirit where for 40 days he fasts, prays, lives in solitude and is tempted by the devil. This part of the story \u2013 Jesus in the Wilderness, is just a few frames of an ongoing video.\u00a0 I\u2019m going to start with these frames of the video by describing what the wilderness might have been like.\u00a0 Then I\u2019m going to rewind the video to the part of the story that comes just before this part to examine Jesus\u2019 identity, and then I\u2019m going to fast forward the video beyond the wilderness to the parts of the story that show the beginning of Jesus ministry (his mission) so that the larger picture might answer the questions, \u201chow was it possible for him to endure? What were the difference makers?\u201d<br \/><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">The frames of the video that make up the wilderness for Jesus could show us different things.\u00a0 If we pan with a wide angle, the wilderness from afar looks formidable, hot, dry and life-sapping. What creature could possibly endure long days in the wilderness of Judea?\u00a0 But Jesus spent many days there, 40, we are told and in the Bible this number 40, whether days or years, means a God infused time of reorientation, regeneration and renewal. If we zoom in now both in distance and time, and our familiarity with the details grows we might begin to notice the vegetation \u2013 there is some \u2013 it\u2019s short and scrubby and created especially for this environment &#8211; created to absorb the daily dose of heaven\u2019s dew just enough to sustain the life in the plant, for itself and for ants or lizards or humans, if one knows or has learned how and when to collect its precious drops.\u00a0 And again if we look closely and with increasing familiarity afforded by time and solitude we notice that there are crevices in the rocks that provide much needed shade in the heat of the day and other places where at night one could curl up against warm rocks that radiate back into the darkness\u00a0 the heat they had absorbed during the day\u00a0 &#8211; again not much, but maybe just enough to keep one warm during the cold and dewy nights.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">In these frames of the video we are invited to see Jesus holding on or holding out in this environment that in its harshness will just barely sustain him.\u00a0 And in that place he begins to struggle with\u00a0 &#8211;<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">inner demons? <\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">with an exterior manifestation of the devil? <\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">I\u2019ll let your imagination fill in these frames of the video. \u00a0<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">In any event, the struggle is real. <\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">First, he is tempted to use the God infused power of the Holy Spirit to change rocks into bread, &#8211; food.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Second, he is tempted to gain dominion over all nations of the world by a using a certain kind of power \u2013 a power that bows to the evil forces in this world.\u00a0 Jesus is being tempted to claim a certain type of authority.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Third, he is tempted to ask God to keep him safe (if he should choose to throw himself off the top of the temple).<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">In the extremity of his wilderness experience Jesus is tempted by the devil to claim only the things that are rightfully his to claim as a \u201cBeloved\u201d of God \u2013 food, authority and safety.\u00a0 This is often why this text can seem confusing.\u00a0 Aren\u2019t some of these things good things?<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">And in this struggle, Jesus, infused with the power of the Holy Spirit that led him there in the first place manages to stay focused on the very source of his identity\u00a0 &#8211; the God of whom he is Beloved.\u00a0 When Jesus quotes scripture in reply to the devil, perhaps he is not the clever rabbi, but rather the lost child who clings to the only presence of God in this dreadful place, the internalized Word of the Spirit that pleads for us when we cannot. And by the power working within him, he quotes the Hebrew Scriptures he learned in his childhood, youth and young adulthood.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">\u201cScripture has it,\u201d Jesus says, \u201cthat we shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God.\u201d<br \/>\u201cScripture has it,\u201d he says again, \u201cthat<br \/>we shall worship the Most High God and God alone will we serve.\u00a0 And it also says, \u2018Do not put God to the test.\u2019\u201d<br \/>And the Devil, defeated for the moment, left him to await another opportunity \u2013 possibly the opportunity that presented itself as agony in the Garden of Gethsemane where Jesus says, directly to God this time,\u00a0 \u201cNot my will but yours be done.\u201d<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Rewinding the video, this trip into the wilderness was preceded by a profound realization of his identity -who he was and therefore what he might be capable of. In all three of the synoptic gospels, Matthew, Mark and Luke, Jesus\u2019 identity as the Beloved Son of God was revealed to him at his baptism in the Jordan and it was immediately after this time of certainty about his identity in God that the Holy Spirit, led or drove him into the wilderness where the full implications of this reality had a chance to sink in.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">And then if we fast forward the video to the time immediately follow the wilderness experience, we see that the Spirit compels him into fulfilling his identity and call. For Jesus this means a life of ministry that begins with preaching and teaching in the local synagogues.\u00a0 In the synagogue in Nazareth he reads a passage in Isaiah:\u00a0 in which the clearly intended implication is that the words foun<br \/>\nd there apply to him. The Spirit of God is upon him and it has anointed him to bring good news to the poor, it has sent him to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind and to let the oppressed to go free and to proclaim the year of the Lord\u2019s favour.<\/p>\n<p>So if we take as given that the wilderness experience was part of a much larger picture, how does that help us to understand what the wilderness experience was all about?\u00a0 What were the difference makers?\u00a0 How did Jesus endure, and what were the insights that were instrumental in carrying him through everything that followed (his ministry among ordinary people, conflict with Jewish and Roman authorities, death as a victim of Roman Torture and resurrection at the Hand of God) <\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">One of those indispensible insights was that all of this, his chosenness as Beloved of God, the wilderness experience and his ministry were wrapped up in and held in God.\u00a0 All of it was about the God who anointed him and all of it was about the fact that his life was caught up in an intimate relationship with God, with a God who loved him and raised him up to the status of Son of God.\u00a0 It was also\u00a0 about God\u2019s work of salvation in the world \u2013 a world where the poor would have good news preached to them and the blind would see and the people would be liberated from their bondage.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">The wilderness experience solidified Jesus\u2019 orientation towards and around God and God\u2019s desire for the world.\u00a0 With this orientation towards God, then and only then could Jesus live out the implications of His God given identity.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Ironically as Jesus began to live out of his God given identity he did begin feeding the poor the food they had a right to eat \u2013 both the food of the Word of God and actual physical bread.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Also ironically, Jesus began to act with authority and invited others to act with the same authority that God bestows on all of God\u2019s beloved.<\/p>\n<p>All of us are invited to claim our identity as God\u2019s beloved and for many of us at different times in our lives this has meant shortly thereafter a trip into the wilderness.\u00a0 What that wilderness might look like whether from a panned distant shot of the video camera or up close only you will know.\u00a0 You may even still be there.\u00a0 A wilderness is anywhere that one feels lost or alone and\/or confused &#8211; bewildered.\u00a0 The environment is likely to be harsh, a place where one feels emotionally, physically and spiritually that you can barely survive and to exacerbate the pain it is a place where one often feels alone.\u00a0 But the primary difference maker is precisely the recognition that the sense of aloneness is a fallacy.\u00a0 It\u2019s false.\u00a0 We are never alone.\u00a0 For we are the Beloved of God.\u00a0 That is the truth of our identity, no matter how we feel or what we are experiencing.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">The other difference makers for Jesus were probably his spiritual practices, prayer, fasting, and his familiarity with scripture.\u00a0 The best spiritual practices do not ultimately separate us from our world, by taking us out or away from the things we know and love, but only separate us from our habits and assumptions that cause us to limit or doubt the divine presence. Our spiritual practices have the potential to help us find God by opening us up to the reality that God is precisely everywhere we are afraid or lost.\u00a0 And this is our safety.\u00a0 It is not a safety that guarantees we will not suffer .\u00a0 The ultimate experience of Jesus, the apostle Paul and so many others through the centuries, including our Anabaptist forbears, reveal to us that sometimes suffering is the result of living out the implications of profound convictions about God.\u00a0 But we can be assured that we will be kept safe from the evil powers and principalities and temptations that seek to separate us from the Love of God and from God\u2019s desires for us and the world. <\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Psalm 91 (another important text for today) talks about this kind of safety.\u00a0 It is an important Psalm of assurance for anyone who knows the fear and seeming isolation of a wilderness experience.\u00a0 Its power to reassure is even more powerful because the last few verses of the Psalm are written in the first person singular address \u2013 as if from the mouth of God to the one who hears:<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Because you love me, I will deliver you;<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">I will rescue you because you acknowledge my Name.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">You will call upon me, and I will answer you.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">I will be with you in trouble;<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">I will deliver you and honor you.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">I will satisfy you with a long life<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">And show you my salvation.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">If you are there in your own wilderness right now or when you are there, I invite you at those times to cling to your identity as Beloved daughters and sons of God, sisters and brothers of Christ and each other.\u00a0 Time in the wilderness is never an end in itself, though the struggle may feel like it at times.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">Finally, as Christians and particularly as Mennonite Christians with Anabaptist forebears, all three parts of the story that I focused on today are important.<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">First, Discovering our Identity as Beloved sons or daughters of God, just as Jesus discovered his,<br \/><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">followed by a time of reorientation and\/or regeneration and renewal possibly experienced as suffering and trials in a wilderness experience,<\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">followed by the experience of feeling compelled into living out the implications of our identity whatever that might uniquely mean for each one of us.\u00a0 For us these are three inseparable parts of the Christ Story. <\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">And beyond that we deliberately seek to live in the light of the whole story of Jesus as we seek to live as his disciples.\u00a0 This is why it makes sense for us as Mennonites to observe the period of Lent, the 40 days that lead up to Palm Sunday, Good Friday and Easter.\u00a0 The period of Lent can be for us an important time to focus reflectively on the life and ministry of Christ.\u00a0 It becomes an opportunity to walk with him and discover again the life and light of his life that were so opposed by the evil forces of his time.\u00a0 And finally it becomes a time to make that journey in light of the knowledge that those forces of darkness ultimately were not more powerful than the light and love and power of God that resurrected him from the dead. <\/font><\/p>\n<p><font face=\"tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif\" color=\"#000000\">May our reflective journey through Lent together as sisters and brothers of each other and disciples of Jesus be difference makers in our own lives.\u00a0 Let us hold on to and remember that it is our Identity as a Beloved sons and daughters of God that will ultimately hold on to us come what may as we pursue our goal of faithful living in Christ. <\/font><\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u00a0 Based on Luke 4:1-13\u00a0 and Psalm 91 I don\u2019t know about the rest of you, but I enjoy watching the Olympics.\u00a0 And whether you enjoy watching the games or not, it\u2019s hard not be caught up in the intensity of the struggle of these athletes to persevere, to be their best, to take risks, and to express both the joy and the anguish of it all as they succeed in varying degrees to reach their goal.\u00a0 These two weeks&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[10],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1216","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-sermons-a-worship-audio"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1216","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/9"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1216"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1216\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1216"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1216"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tumc.ca\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1216"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}